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Dragon Inn

Released 1967
Runtime 111
Language Mandarin
Director King Hu

What it’s about

A corrupt government runs China during the mid-15th century. Power-hungry eunuch Zhao (Bai Ying) executes the innocent General Yu, and Yu’s family gets exiled. Zhao sends a delegation of his men to a remote outpost to intercept and kill them. But a few men (and one fierce woman) loyal to Yu also congregate at Dragon Gate Inn, including a righteous swordsman (Shih Chun) and a pair of travellers with lethal hidden skills.

Why we love it

Hu’s first film in Taiwan after leaving the studio system in Hong Kong was a box-office smash and remains a shining example of wuxia filmmaking, with archetypal characters, confident widescreen compositions and dazzling choreography. The inn (an impressive construction) brims with saloon-style showdowns and a good amount of comic action. With stylistic influences from Peking opera and gun-slinging westerns, Hu sets a high bar with his ominous central location and sweeping swordplay.

Bai Ying, Shangkuan Ling-fung, Shih Chun King Hu

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